Tangled up in Blue
Certified Senior Citizen⭐🦐
It's inevitable that sooner or later this week or next that tougher restrictions are coming in.Hospitalisations and deaths still manageable for now and we should be seeing them peaking soon.
It's inevitable that sooner or later this week or next that tougher restrictions are coming in.Hospitalisations and deaths still manageable for now and we should be seeing them peaking soon.
Perhaps the Chancellor is working out what financial help can be given to the Hospitality industry, as they would probably be top of the list, if more were introduced after Christmas?.I'm surprised new restrictions haven't been introduced, bottled it I'm thinking.
FYI I`m not an epidemiologist.I suggest you contact someone who is.Apparently it's not too hard to grasp though so Barna must know the answer?
I've tried to address the same point in a previous post.
This really is the burning question that nobody wants to answer.
I know plenty of people who caught COVID post-vaccination. It happens often, but it seems to be a touchy issue.
I don't have a subscription to The Guardian so only get to read the first line.FYI I`m not an epidemiologist.I suggest you contact someone who is.
Doubt if you've read the article I linked to.This is the relevant part of it :-
" Brown cautioned that “even the fully vaccinated” in Britain remained at risk as long as the virus was given “free rein to mutate” in countries with poor access to jabs. “The grim truth remains that until no one anywhere lives in fear, then everyone everywhere will have to live in fear."
It's not a proposition from Wittgenstein.
1.I don't have a subscription to The Guardian so only get to read the first line.
2.That quote makes it sound like the virus can only mutate on the unvaccinated.
3.I don't believe I have read anywhere at any point that having the vaccine stops the virus mutating, it only makes the symptoms less severe
4.People shouldn't be living in fear, they should be living their lives. We are a short time on this planet, we need to make the most of it, not live in fear
I think the truth will lie in whether viral infection levels in vaccinated are equivalent to that of unvaccinated, if so then by that logic you could determine both are as likely to produce 'variants'. If they are equal then we'll need a rethink, but that's for scientists to determine ultimately.My understanding is that the probability of the virus mutating increases with being infected, length and severity of infection and then the onward transmission. Whilst the vaccine(s) is not 100% effective at any of these the vaccinated can still 'cause' the virus to mutate but the the vaccine does reduce the chances of every aspect of this, the chance of becoming infected, the length and severity of infection and the onward transmission and hence the likelihood of a mutation in a vaccinated person is lower versus non vaccinated. How it actually physically mutates - you'll need an expert!
If not, we could see profound impacts on health systems but also across sectors such as education, hospitality, public transport, police and essential national infrastructure as infections prevent people from working. No country can afford to think they are an exception.
Which affects Fulham's game at Swansea on 3rd January.Luckily I bought my Fulham FCTV half-seaon pass yesterday so I should be able to see the game.Wales have a ban on fans at football stadiums.